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1.
Nature ; 616(7957): 482-487, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37076728

ABSTRACT

Partitioning of americium from lanthanides (Ln) present in used nuclear fuel plays a key role in the sustainable development of nuclear energy1-3. This task is extremely challenging because thermodynamically stable Am(III) and Ln(III) ions have nearly identical ionic radii and coordination chemistry. Oxidization of Am(III) to Am(VI) produces AmO22+ ions distinct with Ln(III) ions, which has the potential to facilitate separations in principle. However, the rapid reduction of Am(VI) back to Am(III) by radiolysis products and organic reagents required for the traditional separation protocols including solvent and solid extractions hampers practical redox-based separations. Herein, we report a nanoscale polyoxometalate (POM) cluster with a vacancy site compatible with the selective coordination of hexavalent actinides (238U, 237Np, 242Pu and 243Am) over trivalent lanthanides in nitric acid media. To our knowledge, this cluster is the most stable Am(VI) species in aqueous media observed so far. Ultrafiltration-based separation of nanoscale Am(VI)-POM clusters from hydrated lanthanide ions by commercially available, fine-pored membranes enables the development of a once-through americium/lanthanide separation strategy that is highly efficient and rapid, does not involve any organic components and requires minimal energy input.

2.
Chem Sci ; 12(43): 14441-14450, 2021 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34880995

ABSTRACT

In photosynthesis, solar energy is used to produce solar fuels in the form of new chemical bonds. A critical step to mimic photosystem II (PS II), a key protein in nature's photosynthesis, for artificial photosynthesis is designing devices for efficient light-driven water oxidation. Here, we describe a single molecular assembly electrode that duplicates the key components of PSII. It consists of a polypyridyl light absorber, chemically linked to an intermediate electron donor, with a molecular-based water oxidation catalyst on a SnO2/TiO2 core/shell electrode. The synthetic device mimics PSII in achieving sustained, light-driven water oxidation catalysis. It highlights the value of the tyrosine-histidine pair in PSII in achieving efficient water oxidation catalysis in artificial photosynthetic devices.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(33): 40127-40133, 2021 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34383474

ABSTRACT

Photochemical water oxidation was carried out at a mesoporous nanoparticle film composed of indium tin-doped oxide (nanoITO). Annealing nanoITO at temperatures above 250 °C affects both conducting and semiconducting properties. Impressive photoelectrochemical activity was observed at this degenerate n-type semiconductor electrode, outperforming the traditional semiconductor titanium dioxide (TiO2) under the same conditions. In a 0.1 M HNO3 solution, the nanoITO electrode sustained photocurrents of 1.0 mA/cm2 at an Eapplied = 1.5 V vs saturated calomel electrode (SCE) (η = 0.55 V) under a 90 mW/cm2 UV illumination (375 nm). This activity is compared to ∼0.3 mA/cm2 with a traditional TiO2 electrode under the same potential and conditions. Evidence for oxygen generation in the photolysis experiments was quantified using the collector-generator method, and >70% photocurrent efficiency for O2 production was confirmed at this nanoITO photoanode.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(24): 13256-13260, 2020 06 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32482883

ABSTRACT

Artificial photosynthesis provides a way to store solar energy in chemical bonds. Achieving water splitting without an applied external potential bias provides the key to artificial photosynthetic devices. We describe here a tandem photoelectrochemical cell design that combines a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC) and an organic solar cell (OSC) in a photoanode for water oxidation. When combined with a Pt electrode for H2 evolution, the electrode becomes part of a combined electrochemical cell for water splitting, 2H2O → O2 + 2H2, by increasing the voltage of the photoanode sufficiently to drive bias-free reduction of H+ to H2 The combined electrode gave a 1.5% solar conversion efficiency for water splitting with no external applied bias, providing a mimic for the tandem cell configuration of PSII in natural photosynthesis. The electrode provided sustained water splitting in the molecular photoelectrode with sustained photocurrent densities of 1.24 mA/cm2 for 1 h under 1-sun illumination with no applied bias.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(20): 9169-9174, 2020 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32363870

ABSTRACT

Crystalline porous materials such as covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are advanced materials to tackle challenges of catalysis and separation in industrial processes. Their synthetic routes often require elevated temperatures, closed systems with high pressure, and long reaction times, hampering their industrial applications. Here we use a traditionally unperceived strategy to assemble highly crystalline COFs by electron beam irradiation with controlled received dosage, contrasting sharply with the previous observation that radiation damages the crystallinity of solids. Such synthesis by electron beam irradiation can be achieved under ambient conditions within minutes, and the process is amendable for large-scale production. The intense and targeted energy input to the reactants leads to new reaction pathways that favor COF formation in nearly quantitative yield. This strategy is applicable not only to known COFs but also to new series of flexible COFs that are difficult to obtain using traditional methods.

6.
Langmuir ; 36(1): 96-108, 2020 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31847520

ABSTRACT

In six of seven cases, direct anodic oxidation of the ethynyl group of an ethynylphenyl-derivatized free-base porphyrin gave modified glassy carbon electrodes in which the porphyrin was strongly surface-bound, most likely in a perpendicular geometry through covalent attachment of the ethynyl group to a surface carbon atom. The porphyrins each contained an ethynylphenyl group in one meso position and varied in the groups present in the other three meso positions. Electrografted 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(ethynylphenyl)porphyrin, H21, which has ethynyl moieties in all four meso positions, has well-defined surface voltammetry and grows to multilayer levels upon repeated cyclic voltammetry (CV) deposition scans. Multilayering was not observed to the same degree for monoethynylphenyl-substituted porphyrins and became progressively less for porphyrins having groups in the 15-meso position that were more protective against ethynyl radical attack. Clean molecular monolayer-level coverage was observed for 5-ethynylphenyl-10,20-bis(3-methoxyphenyl)-15-hexylporphyrin, H25. Owing to the fact that the ethynyl oxidation potential (1.1 to 1.5 V vs ferrocene) is more positive than that of the second macrocycle oxidation, the longevities and follow-up reactions of the porphyrin dications were also studied by CV, chemical oxidation, and optical spectroscopy in homogeneous solution. The primary follow-up products of the doubly oxidized porphyrins, whether surface-bound or in solution, were pyrrole-protonated species that were easily reduced back to the neutral porphyrin.

7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(23): 12564-12571, 2020 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31488721

ABSTRACT

In the development of photoelectrochemical cells for water splitting or CO2 reduction, a major challenge is O2 evolution at photoelectrodes that, in behavior, mimic photosystem II. At an appropriate semiconductor electrode, a water oxidation catalyst must be integrated with a visible light absorber in a stable half-cell configuration. Here, we describe an electrode consisting of a light absorber, an intermediate electron donor layer, and a water oxidation catalyst for sustained light driven water oxidation catalysis. In assembling the electrode on nanoparticle SnO2/TiO2 electrodes, a Ru(II) polypyridyl complex was used as the light absorber, NiO was deposited as an overlayer, and a Ru(II) 2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate complex as the water oxidation catalyst. In the final electrode, addition of the NiO overlayer enhanced performance toward water oxidation with the final electrode operating with a 1.1 mA/cm2 photocurrent density for 2 h without decomposition under one sun illumination in a pH 4.65 solution. We attribute the enhanced performance to the role of NiO as an electron transfer mediator between the light absorber and the catalyst.

8.
Chem Sci ; 10(16): 4436-4444, 2019 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31057771

ABSTRACT

We describe here the preparation and characterization of a photocathode assembly for CO2 reduction to CO in 0.1 M LiClO4 acetonitrile. The assembly was formed on 1.0 µm thick mesoporous films of NiO using a layer-by-layer procedure based on Zr(iv)-phosphonate bridging units. The structure of the Zr(iv) bridged assembly, abbreviated as NiO|-DA-RuCP2 2+-Re(i), where DA is the dianiline-based electron donor (N,N,N',N'-((CH2)3PO3H2)4-4,4'-dianiline), RuCP2+ is the light absorber [Ru((4,4'-(PO3H2CH2)2-2,2'-bipyridine)(2,2'-bipyridine))2]2+, and Re(i) is the CO2 reduction catalyst, ReI((4,4'-PO3H2CH2)2-2,2'-bipyridine)(CO)3Cl. Visible light excitation of the assembly in CO2 saturated solution resulted in CO2 reduction to CO. A steady-state photocurrent density of 65 µA cm-2 was achieved under one sun illumination and an IPCE value of 1.9% was obtained with 450 nm illumination. The importance of the DA aniline donor in the assembly as an initial site for reduction of the RuCP2+ excited state was demonstrated by an 8 times higher photocurrent generated with DA present in the surface film compared to a control without DA. Nanosecond transient absorption measurements showed that the expected reduced one-electron intermediate, RuCP+, was formed on a sub-nanosecond time scale with back electron transfer to the electrode on the microsecond timescale which competes with forward electron transfer to the Re(i) catalyst at t 1/2 = 2.6 µs (k ET = 2.7 × 105 s-1).

9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(19): 7926-7933, 2019 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31021090

ABSTRACT

In artificial photosynthesis, the sun drives water splitting into H2 and O2 or converts CO2 into a useful form of carbon. In most schemes, water oxidation is typically the limiting half-reaction. Here, we introduce a molecular approach to the design of a photoanode that incorporates an electron acceptor, a sensitizer, an electron donor, and a water oxidation catalyst in a single molecular assembly. The strategy mimics the key elements in Photosystem II by initiating light-driven water oxidation with integration of a light absorber, an electron acceptor, an electron donor, and a catalyst in a controlled molecular environment on the surface of a conducting oxide electrode. Visible excitation of the assembly results in the appearance of reductive equivalents at the electrode and oxidative equivalents at a catalyst that persist for seconds in aqueous solutions. Steady-state illumination of the assembly with 440 nm light with an applied bias results in photoelectrochemical water oxidation with a per-photon absorbed efficiency of 2.3%. The results are notable in demonstrating that light-driven water oxidation can be carried out at a conductive electrode in a structure with the functional elements of Photosystem II including charge separation and water oxidation.

10.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(28): 4035-4038, 2019 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30887982

ABSTRACT

We present here the electrochemical oxidation of Am(iii) to AmVO2+ and AmVIO22+ in pH 1 nitric acid using a mesoporous tin-doped indium oxide electrode modified with a covalently attached dipyrazinylpyridine ligand. The applied potential affects the distribution of Am oxidation products. At potential 1.8 V, only Am(v) is observed, while increasing the potential to as much as 2.0 V, results in oxidation of Am(iii) to Am(v) and subsequent oxidation of Am(v) to Am(vi). At applied potentials >2.0 V, Am(iii) is oxidized to Am(v), while Am(vi) is reduced to Am(v). The latter reduction reaction is likely due to the increased rate of hydrogen peroxide formation from the 2-electron oxidation of water at the electrode at these high potentials. The development of future ligand modified electrodes for actinide oxidations must consider how they facilitate Am oxidations while disfavoring unwanted or competing reactions.

11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(34): 8523-8528, 2018 08 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30082396

ABSTRACT

Stabilized photoanodes for light-driven water oxidation have been prepared on nanoparticle core/shell electrodes with surface-stabilized donor-acceptor chromophores, a water oxidation catalyst, and an electron-transfer mediator. For the electrode, fluorine-doped tin oxide FTO|SnO2/TiO2|-Org1-|1.1 nm Al2O3|-RuP2+-WOC (water oxidation catalyst) with Org1 (1-cyano-2-(4-(diphenylamino)phenyl)vinyl)phosphonic acid), the mediator RuP2+ ([Ru(4,4-(PO3H2)2-2,2-bipyridine)(2,2-bipyridine)2]2+), and the WOC, Ru(bda)(py(CH2)(3or10)P(O3H)2)2 (bda is 2,2-bipyridine-6,6-dicarboxylate with x = 3 or 10), solar excitation resulted in photocurrents of ∼500 µA/cm2 and quantitative O2 evolution at pH 4.65. Related results were obtained for other Ru(II) polypyridyl mediators. For the organic dye PP (5-(4-(dihydroxyphosphoryl)phenyl)-10,15,20-Tris(mesityl)porphyrin), solar water oxidation occurred with a driving force near 0 V.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(13): 3449-3453, 2018 03 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29383866

ABSTRACT

Light-driven water splitting was achieved using a dye-sensitized mesoporous oxide film and the oxidation of bromide (Br- ) to bromine (Br2 ) or tribromide (Br3- ). The chemical oxidant (Br2 or Br3- ) is formed during illumination at the photoanode and used as a sacrificial oxidant to drive a water oxidation catalyst (WOC), here demonstrated using [Ru(bda)(pic)2 ], (1; pic=picoline, bda=2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate). The photochemical oxidation of bromide produces a chemical oxidant with a potential of 1.09 V vs. NHE for the Br2 /Br- couple or 1.05 V vs. NHE for the Br3- /Br- couple, which is sufficient to drive water oxidation at 1 (RuV/IV ≈1.0 V vs. NHE at pH 5.6). At pH 5.6, using a 0.2 m acetate buffer containing 40 mm LiBr and the [Ru(4,4'-PO3 H2 -bpy)(bpy)2 ]2+ (RuP2+ , bpy=2,2'-bipyridine) chromophore dye on a SnO2 /TiO2 core-shell electrode resulted in a photocurrent density of around 1.2 mA cm-2 under approximately 1 Sun illumination and a Faradaic efficiency upon addition of 1 of 77 % for oxygen evolution.

13.
Langmuir ; 34(4): 1327-1339, 2018 01 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29309154

ABSTRACT

Two ethynyl-derivatized isomers of bis(fulvalene)diiron (BFD, 1,1'-biferrocenylene) were prepared and covalently attached to glassy carbon electrodes through their ethynyl group by three different electrode modification methods. Cyclic voltammetry and square wave (SW) voltammetry were used to characterize surface coverages of 1.4-5.5 × 10-10 mol cm-2, the higher of these corresponding to roughly a monolayer, based on computation of an idealized close-packing structure for ethynylbis(fulvalene)diiron (E-BFD) on a solid surface. In a dichloromethane solution containing a smaller electrolyte anion such as [PF6]- or [ClO4]-, the E-BFD-modified electrodes exhibited two quasi-Nernstian one-electron oxidations. In contrast, the current for the second oxidation process, [E-BFD]+/2+, was diminished in electrolytes containing one of the large fluoroaryl borate anions, [B(C6F5)4]- or [B(C6H3(CF3)2)4]-. The effect was enhanced for electrodes having higher surface coverages being probed at shorter voltammetric time scales. SW voltammetry showed that the diminished currents for [E-BFD]+/2+ in large-anion electrolytes are not caused by slow electron transfer. Rather, they are attributed to mixed diffusivity of the counter-anions at the electrode/solution interface, as [E-BFD]+ and the anion form the optimum (lowest-energy) configuration of a 1:1 ion pair. The interior transport of the anion required to reach this configuration may be sterically encumbered, accounting for the diminished charge transfer observed with electrolytes containing large anions.

14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(2): 278-283, 2018 01 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29279386

ABSTRACT

Monodispersed mixtures of 6-nm Cu and Ag nanoparticles were prepared by electrochemical reduction on electrochemically polymerized poly-Fe(vbpy)3(PF6)2 film electrodes on glassy carbon. Conversion of the complex to poly-Fe(vbpy)2(CN)2 followed by surface binding of salts of the cations and electrochemical reduction gave a mixture of chemically distinct clusters on the surface, (Cu) m ,(Ag) n |polymer|glassy carbon electrode (GCE), as shown by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements. A (Cu)2,(Ag)3|(80-monolayer-poly-Fe(vbpy)32+|GCE electrode at -1.33 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode (RHE) in 0.5 M KHCO3, with 8 ppm added benzotriazole (BTA) at 0 °C, gave acetate with a faradaic efficiency of 21.2%.

15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(2): 719-726, 2018 01 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29232507

ABSTRACT

Water oxidation is a critical step in artificial photosynthesis and provides the protons and electrons used in reduction reactions to make solar fuels. Significant advances have been made in the area of molecular water oxidation catalysts with a notable breakthrough in the development of Ru(II) complexes that use a planar "bda" ligand (bda is 2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate). These Ru(II)(bda) complexes show lower overpotentials for driving water oxidation making them ideal for light-driven applications with a suitable chromophore. Nevertheless, synthesis of heterogeneous Ru(II)(bda) complexes remains challenging. We discuss here a new "bottom-up" synthetic method for immobilizing these catalysts at the surface of a photoanode for use in a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC). The procedure provides a basis for rapidly screening the role of ligand variations at the catalyst in order to understand the impact on device performance. The best results of a water-oxidation DSPEC photoanode based on this procedure reached 1.4 mA/cm2 at pH 7 in 0.1 M [PO4H2]-/[PO4H]2-solution with minimal loss in catalytic behavior over 30 min, and produced an incident photon to current efficiency (IPCE) of 24.8% at 440 nm.

16.
Chem Soc Rev ; 46(20): 6148-6169, 2017 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28879350

ABSTRACT

Initial experiments on water oxidation by well-defined molecular catalysts were initiated with the goal of finding solutions to solar energy conversion. This account is a summary of research in this area by the T. J. Meyer research group. It begins with the design and characterization of the first catalyst, the blue Ru dimer, to current applications with surface-bound complexes on photoanodes for water oxidation in Dye Sensitized Photoelectrosynthesis Cells.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(41): 14518-14525, 2017 10 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28810743

ABSTRACT

In a dye sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC), the relative orientation of the catalyst and chromophore plays an important role in determining the device efficiency. Here we introduce a new, robust atomic layer deposition (ALD) procedure for the preparation of molecular chromophore-catalyst assemblies on wide bandgap semiconductors. In this procedure, solution deposited, phosphonate derivatized metal complexes on metal oxide surfaces are treated with reactive metal reagents in the gas phase by ALD to form an outer metal ion bridging group, which can bind a second phosphonate containing species from solution to establish a R1-PO2-O-M-O-PO2-R2 type surface assembly. With the ALD procedure, assemblies bridged by Al(III), Sn(IV), Ti(IV), or Zr(IV) metal oxide units have been prepared. To evaluate the performance of this new type of surface assembly, intra-assembly electron transfer was investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy, and light-driven water splitting experiments under steady-state illumination were conducted. A SnO2 bridged assembly on SnO2/TiO2 core/shell electrodes undergoes light-driven water oxidation with an incident photon to current efficiency (IPCE) of 17.1% at 440 nm. Light-driven water reduction with a ruthenium trisbipyridine chromophore and molecular Ni(II) catalyst on NiO films was also used to produce H2. Compared to conventional solution-based procedures, the ALD approach offers significant advantages in scope and flexibility for the preparation of stable surface structures.

18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(37): 9809-9813, 2017 09 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28847965

ABSTRACT

Dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cells (DSPECs) provide a flexible approach for solar water splitting based on the integration of molecular light absorption and catalysis on oxide electrodes. Recent advances in this area, including the use of core/shell oxide interfacial structures and surface stabilization by atomic layer deposition, have led to improved charge-separation lifetimes and the ability to obtain substantially improved photocurrent densities. Here, we investigate the introduction of Ag nanoparticles into the core/shell structure and report that they greatly enhance light-driven water oxidation at a DSPEC photoanode. Under 1-sun illumination, Ag nanoparticle electrodes achieved high photocurrent densities, surpassing 2 mA cm-2 with an incident photon-to-current efficiency of 31.8% under 450-nm illumination.

19.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(19): 16651-16659, 2017 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28441864

ABSTRACT

Photoinduced electron injection, intra-assembly electron transfer, and back-electron transfer are investigated in a single-site molecular assembly formed by covalently linking a phosphonated terthiophene (T3) chromophore to a Ru(terpyridine)(bipyridine)(L)2+ (L = MeCN or H2O) water oxidation catalyst adsorbed onto a mesoporous metal-oxide (MOx) film. Density functional theory calculations of the T3-trpy-Ru-L assembly indicate that the molecular components are strongly coupled with enhanced low-energy absorptions owing to the presence of an intraligand charge transfer (ILCT) transition between the T3 and trpy moieties. Ultrafast spectroscopy of the MOx//T3-trpy-Ru-L assemblies reveals that excitation of the surface-bound T3 chromophore results in ps-ns electron injection into the metal-oxide conduction band. Electron injection is followed by rapid (<35 ps) intra-assembly electron transfer from the RuII catalyst to regenerate the T3 chromophore with subsequent back-electron transfer on the microsecond time scale.

20.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(39): 33533-33538, 2017 Oct 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28244735

ABSTRACT

Interfacial charge transfer and core-shell structures play important roles in dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cells (DSPEC) for water splitting into H2 and O2. An important element in the design of the photoanode in these devices is a core/shell structure which controls local electron transfer dynamics. Here, we introduce a new element, an internal layer of Al2O3 lying between the Sb:SnO2/TiO2 layers in a core/shell electrode which can improve photocurrents by up to 300%. In these structures, the results of photocurrent, transient absorption, and linear scan voltammetry measurements point to an important role for the Al2O3 layer in controlling internal electron transfer within the core/shell structure.

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